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Fabrication of a biomimetic spinal cord tissue construct with heterogenous mechanical properties using intrascaffold cell assembly.

Kevin F FirouzianYu SongFeng LinTing Zhang
Published in: Biotechnology and bioengineering (2020)
In tissue engineering studies, scaffolds play a very important role in offering both physical and chemical cues for cell growth and tissue regeneration. However, in some cases, tissue regeneration requires scaffolds with high mechanical properties (e.g., bone and cartilage), while cells need a soft mechanical microenvironment. In this study, to mimic the heterogenous mechanical properties of a spinal cord tissue, a biomimetic rat tissue construct is fabricated. A collagen-coated poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) scaffold is manufactured using thermally induced phase separation casting. Primary rat neural cells (P01 Wistar rat cortex) with soft hydrogels are later printed within the scaffold using an image-guided intrascaffold cell assembly technique. The scaffolds have unidirectional microporous structure with parallel axial macrochannels (260 ± 4 µm in diameter). Scaffolds showed mechanical properties similar to rat spine (ultimate tensile strength: 0.085 MPa, Young's modulus [stretch]: 0.31 MPa). The bioink composed of gelatin/alginate/fibrinogen is precisely printed into the macrochannels and showed mechanical properties suitable for neural cells (Young's modulus [compressive]: 3.814 kPa). Scaffold interface, cell viability, and immunostaining analyses show uniform distribution of stable, healthy, and elongated neural cells and neurites over 14 culture days in vitro. The results demonstrated that this method can serve as a valuable tool to aid manufacturing of tissue constructs requiring heterogenous mechanical properties for complex cell and/or biomolecule assembly.
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